logo
For the 2nd straight year, Hurricanes left to lament falling in huge series hole in NHL playoff exit

For the 2nd straight year, Hurricanes left to lament falling in huge series hole in NHL playoff exit

Fox Sports29-05-2025

Associated Press
RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) — For the second straight year, the Carolina Hurricanes failed to win a game in their last postseason series until on the edge of elimination.
This time, it ended their season in another Eastern Conference final — the stage proving to be a roadblock in their multiyear Stanley Cup push.
The Hurricanes fell 5-3 to the Florida Panthers on Wednesday night in Game 5, sending the Panthers back to the sport's final stage for the third straight year while ending Carolina's latest lengthy playoff grind short of the ultimate goal.
And it ended in a similar fashion to the previous year: with Carolina losing the first three games of a series, spending multiple games trying to dig out of that massive hole and then losing a two-goal lead at home in the game that ultimately ended their season.
'I think essentially we lost in the first few games,' Carolina captain Jordan Staal said. 'You can't start a series like that and expect a better outcome.'
A year ago, it was an 0-3 series deficit to the Presidents' Trophy-winning New York Rangers in the second round. The Hurricanes regrouped to win two elimination games and carried a 3-1 lead into the third period of a Game 6 at home, only to see the Rangers surge back behind Chris Kreider's hat trick in the final 20 minutes in a 5-3 victory.
This time, it was an 0-3 series deficit to the the reigning Stanley Cup champion, a tested and deep team unafraid to play and surpass Carolina's aggressive-forechecking approach. And it ended with a matching final score.
'We knew it was going to be a big task to try to beat them,' said Carolina's Sebastian Aho, who had two first-period goals Wednesday that put the Hurricanes ahead. 'We truly believe we have what it takes, but obviously we fell short yet again."
By the final horn, Carolina's lamentations went back to losing the first two games at home, the second being a 5-0 blowout in which the Panthers were shockingly dominant and the Hurricanes' normally rowdy fans were left to frustratedly chant 'Shoot the puck! Shoot the puck!'
'Those first two games you'd probably want back, but it's too little, too late,' said Seth Jarvis, who had a tying goal midway through the third period before Florida made its go-ahead move on Carter Verhaeghe's score. 'And that's kind of the result of it.'
By Game 3, Carolina had seen a 1-1 game entering the third mushroom into a 6-2 loss for their 15th straight loss in a conference final going back to sweeps in 2009, 2019 and the 2023 one against these Panthers. The Hurricanes regrouped to win Game 4 on the road and avert another sweep, but they faced a long climb to accomplish the improbable.
Carolina jumped to a 2-0 lead with Aho twice putting Panthers giveaways in the neutral zone into the net behind Sergei Bobrovsky. But the Panthers flurry of three goals on consecutive second-period shots — two coming in a 30-second span — erased that deficit and silenced a roaring crowd giddy by Carolina's start.
While the Hurricanes responded with Seth Jarvis' tying goal midway through the third, the dynamic of the game had completely changed after a flurry coach Rod Brind'Amour called 'a backbreaker.'
'You could just feel us — it's just natural, the building, everything, it kind of sucked a little bit of life out of us,' he said.
Carolina's five-week playoff push had included five-game series wins against the New Jersey Devils and Washington Capitals, the latter being this year's top seed in the Eastern Conference. Yet the Hurricanes went from going 5-0 at home in those two series to losing all three home games against the Panthers.
Carolina has won at least one postseason series in its current run of seven straight playoff appearances, though three have now ended in the Eastern final.
'We've had slow starts in the series, when it gets to the top four teams, they're great teams, and having a slow start is never great,' Staal said.
'Obviously we always believe in the group when we get here and coming up short is never easy, and it doesn't get any easier. We'll just try to get better and try again.'
___
AP NHL playoffs: https://apnews.com/hub/stanley-cup and https://apnews.com/hub/nhl
recommended

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Why this Edmonton-Florida Stanley Cup Finals may boil down to a war of attrition: 9 Things
Why this Edmonton-Florida Stanley Cup Finals may boil down to a war of attrition: 9 Things

Yahoo

time28 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Why this Edmonton-Florida Stanley Cup Finals may boil down to a war of attrition: 9 Things

The Stanley Cup Playoffs are many things. The biggest stage in hockey. The brightest lights on ice. A young hockey player's lifelong dream. But along with all those sexy things that help make the post-season irresistible, the finals can also come down to one thing… …which team can win a war of attrition. That and more in this edition of… 9. The Oilers have eighteen wins against just two losses over the past two year's worth of post-season games from game Four on. They know how to win. But the Florida Panthers are not just any opponent. More on that in a minute… 8. Only two players in the National Hockey League have recorded three sixty-goal seasons (including regular season and playoffs) since 2005-06: Leon Draisaitl, who scored his sixtieth of this campaign in Game One, and Alexander Ovechkin. 7. NHL officiating in the playoffs makes me just as crazy as it probably makes you. I actually do not mind if the usual stick infraction goes un-called for both sides once the whistles go away. Who cares? But the missed Too-Many-Men call against Florida Friday? That should fall into the same category as Puck Over Glass. 6. Corey Perry would become a UFA on July 1st. The veteran has been terrific this post-season and scored the goal that forced overtime on Friday. Even though the guy is forty, how do you not entertain bringing him back to Edmonton for another season? Even if he ends up half as productive, on the proper contract he would highly likely continue to be a plus. 5. The Oilers have signed forward Viljami Marjala to a two-year entry level contract. Someone who has seen him repeatedly tells me that he is primarily a play maker. The knock against the twenty-two-year-old is that he is slight (176 pounds) and not especially physical. Still, he was 8-44-52 in 54GP for TPS Turku of the SM-liiga in 2024-25. Expect him to be a Top six player in Bakersfield to start…where offensive skill has been in short supply the past couple years. 4. The Jack Adams Trophy for Coach of the Year goes to Washington's Spencer Carbery. A deserving winner, my complaint is not with the very fine Capitals bench boss. It is that despite delivering his team to back-to-back Stanley Cup Finals Kris Knoblauch did not receive a single vote. I mean…not one. It, frankly, is not any better that Paul Maurice is not on the list either. I realize that the result it is based on the regular season. But just as I argued over the G.M.'s award, is it not a coach's primary job to win? 3. Elliotte Friedman reports that the Oilers are working on a contract extension for Trent Frederic. Frederic came to Edmonton in a three-team deal. The price tag for him included Shane Lachance, Maximus Wanner, a second in 2025 and a fourth in 2026. It would be good asset management to retain Frederic. He has been a very dependable defensive player with an edge who Kris Knoblauch clearly trusts. That last part is critical. We will get a better view of his skating and offensive talents once his high ankle sprain is fully healed. Think $3M+ on a longer-term deal. 2. I contend it is the nicest goal I have seen in the NHL all season, especially considering the quality of competition. The 3-2 goal Leon Draisaitl scored on Friday's game should hang in the Louvre. Connor McDavid first deked the reigning Selke winner Aleksander Barkov as if he were not even there. Then, he toe dragged Aaron Ekblad so hard the Panthers' elite defender ended up on his pants in McDavid's Wake. And just for good measure, McDavid sifted a pass through two more Florida players before Draisaitl slammed it home. Goals do not count extra for how pretty they are. But maybe that one should have! We are so blessed to have two players of this quality on the same club to watch every night. will ultimately win the Stanley Cup this season may come down to a series of subtle adjustments on either side. I say that not only because i believe we are watching the best players in this series offering us elite level, entertaining hockey. But because of the quality up and down both lineups. When a battle like this one between Edmonton and Florida is so closely matched, it can sometimes come down to the little things that end up counting more than you might expect. And for me, one of those things is depth. But just having depth on your roster is not enough. The real key is to use it to your advantage in tactical, critical ways. Yes, there is precious little separating these two terrific hockey teams for now…but there are warning signs worth watching for that could ultimately separate the winners from the losers. Depth often does not bear results until later in a series. Of note: Florida played their fourth line extraordinarily little on Friday. Jesper Boqvist was on for just 8:41 across four plus periods. Jonah Gadjovich skated just 8:53 and Tomas Nosek 13:13. That was barely more for that trio than in Game One (7:58, 6:04 and 9:20 respectively). The other team's fourth line in Game Two had Mattias Janmark (16:53), Viktor Arvidsson (15:39) and Vasily Podkolzin (12:45). That is not an insignificant difference. You may say 'But Leavins, Florida won doing that'. Sure. But you have to think that tactic starts to catch up with Florida's Top Six the longer this series goes. It did in the L.A. series. And against Dallas. But it does not end there… Florida tweaked their defensive strategy after Game One by playing D-men Dmitri Kulikov and Nate Schmidt 23:40 and 21:51. But they skated just 18:14 and 17:18 in Game One. Meanwhile, Seth Jones, Aaron Ekblad and Gustav Forsling have played 30+ minutes in both contests. Forsling has looked great. Ekblad and Jones as the games wore on…not so much. If Edmonton's third pairing and fourth line can continue to play well defensively and chip in offensively here and there the way they have, then the law of averages would see to favor Edmonton in a seven-game series. The laws of attrition will start to become factors. The grind sill start to catch up with them. Now, that assumes that among the top players Connor McDavid, Leon Draisaitl and Evan Bouchard will out-play Aleksander Barkov, Sam Reinhart, and Gustav Forsling over that same stretch of time. They are all terrific players on both teams. But I would be more than comfortable betting on the Edmonton guys over seven nights. Now on Bluesky @ Also, find me on Threads @kleavins, Twitter @KurtLeavins, Instagram at LeavinsOnHockey, and Mastodon at KurtLeavins@ This article is not AI generated. DSTAPLES: What solutions might there be for a struggling Oilers D-man KMcCURDY: Panthers best Oilers in Double-OT: Player Grades KLEAVINS: Oilers draw first blood in Stanley Cup Finals In memory of Bruce McCurdy, 1955-2025. Don't miss the news you need to know — add and to your bookmarks and sign up for our newsletters here.

Details Emerge on New York Knicks' Karl-Anthony Towns Decision
Details Emerge on New York Knicks' Karl-Anthony Towns Decision

Yahoo

timean hour ago

  • Yahoo

Details Emerge on New York Knicks' Karl-Anthony Towns Decision

Details Emerge on New York Knicks' Karl-Anthony Towns Decision originally appeared on Athlon Sports. It was an impressive season for the New York Knicks despite them coming up just short of reaching the NBA Finals. Advertisement New York finished third in the Eastern Conference in the regular season and they were then able to make a run to the Eastern Conference Finals after they eliminated both the Detroit Pistons and Boston Celtics. This was the Knicks' first Conference Finals appearance since 2000 but they were unable to advance to the NBA Finals after being eliminated in six games by the Indiana Pacers. New York Knicks stars Jalen Brunson and Karl-Anthony Towns© Petre Thomas-Imagn Images While the Knicks did fall short of making the NBA Finals, it was still a successful season as their new core helped make them contenders once again. Of course, New York's addition of Karl-Anthony Towns from the Minnesota Timberwolves in the offseason was a huge factor to their success this season and a new report by The Athletic's James L. Edwards III and Jon Krawczynski recently revealed why New York made the trade. Advertisement 'New York saw Towns and (Jalen Brunson) as a damaging offensive duo,' Edwards III and Krawczynski wrote. 'One of the best scoring guards in the league could have one of the greatest shooting big men at his disposal. The organization also viewed it as a way to get value back for (Julius) Randle, as the two sides were nowhere close on a deal to keep him in New York long term.' This is a key report as it is clear that the Knicks and Randle were destined to be heading in opposite ways down the road, which allowed New York to capitalize on his value to add a superstar center next to Brunson. The two also reported that the Knicks were 'initially reluctant' to include Donte DiVincenzo in the deal but they decided to do so anyway to land Towns. Minnesota Timberwolves forward Julius Randle guards New York Knicks center Karl-Anthony Towns© Bruce Kluckhohn-Imagn Images While the trade worked out well for the Knicks, Towns did struggle on the defensive end in his first season in New York, especially during the playoffs as many called out the star center. Advertisement Despite this, the addition of Towns has made the Knicks into title contenders and they will now look to upgrade their roster again this summer to try and make a championship run next season. This story was originally reported by Athlon Sports on Jun 8, 2025, where it first appeared.

Kevin Love compares James Dolan to Vince McMahon after Tom Thibodeau firing
Kevin Love compares James Dolan to Vince McMahon after Tom Thibodeau firing

Yahoo

time2 hours ago

  • Yahoo

Kevin Love compares James Dolan to Vince McMahon after Tom Thibodeau firing

The post Kevin Love compares James Dolan to Vince McMahon after Tom Thibodeau firing appeared first on ClutchPoints. When the New York Knicks officially fired Tom Thibodeau after coming up short in the Eastern Conference Finals, it took the sports world by storm. Advertisement Fans in New York were decidedly mixed, outside observers put the move into the context of their preferred fandoms, and some folks even had jokes on the matter, be they with lighthearted jabs or as biting rebuttals of his unique style of coaching. Five-time All-Star Kevin Love firmly fell into the final category but whether he meant to be funny or pointed remains to be seen, as he used the opportunity to compare Knicks owner James Dolan to disgraced former WWE owner Vince McMahon, who would often fire his employees – at least in a televised kayfabe sense – with the dramatic flair of a certified entertainer. Now, on the surface, this post is very funny, with Love's former teammate LeBron James yucking it up in the comments section with a series of laughing emojis, but underneath, what is the NBA Champion forward trying to say? Is he suggesting that Dolan is using the loss as a chance to shake things up in dramatic fashion, even if it was against his own self-interest? Advertisement As Love pointed out, Thibs was the first head coach to take the Knicks to the Eastern Conference Finals in 25 years, and as was often the case with Mr. McMahon, the shortsighted decision to fire folks in the heat of the moment would often come back to bite him in the end. Is Dolan the heel running wild over the Knicks organization just like Mr. McMahon was in WWE? Or was this simply a funny opportunity for Love to make light of the situation? Whether the Knicks' decision was right or wrong remains to be seen, but with the proverbial deed officially done, fans will now have to wait and see what Dolan has cooking to get his organization past the highest ceiling they've reached this century. For the sake of Knicks fans, let's hope firing Tom Thibodeau doesn't blow up in Dolan's face like so many of McMahon's choices in WWE.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store